Profits: Bikes vs Helmets ?
#26
meh
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The answer is 'affect', or how something is experienced bodily (or cognitively depending on your theoretical framework). Airbags are the easiest to compare - they are hidden inside steering wheels and dashboard etc so are mostly not experienced bodily - the big exception being in the case of an accident and anyone can understand how an accident will color your perception of motor vehicle safety.
Helmets on the other hand are worn on the head, they exert weight and presence on the most sensitive and sensory part of your body. They may also be in vision, at the top of the eyeline, and they have straps tightened over the face where there is millions (billions?) of nerve cells. They subtly affect hearing and may cause other bodily sensations too. Affect can also include the perception of broader relational experiences, so the relationship bicycle helmets have to the experience of other helmets (motobike, construction, rock climbing or whatever) can be considered as modulating the affective response.
I think it would be certain that seat belts also modulate the perception of motor vehicle danger, but my guess is not as much due to their different ways they are bodily experienced.
Helmets on the other hand are worn on the head, they exert weight and presence on the most sensitive and sensory part of your body. They may also be in vision, at the top of the eyeline, and they have straps tightened over the face where there is millions (billions?) of nerve cells. They subtly affect hearing and may cause other bodily sensations too. Affect can also include the perception of broader relational experiences, so the relationship bicycle helmets have to the experience of other helmets (motobike, construction, rock climbing or whatever) can be considered as modulating the affective response.
I think it would be certain that seat belts also modulate the perception of motor vehicle danger, but my guess is not as much due to their different ways they are bodily experienced.
Back to my point, somehow bike helmets make people feel biking is dangerous and seat belts in cars do not have this affect on people. sheepeople.

#27
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Many years ago I dated a lady that worked for a company that made child car seats (among other items). The division she worked in.... which was compliance and legal and accounted for the priciest part of the car seats. Layers of compliance regulations and the proper documentation of said compliance was an entire department of people. Plus an in house legal department specialized in dealing with the regular suits due to accidents/injuries.

#28
meh
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Many years ago I dated a lady that worked for a company that made child car seats (among other items). The division she worked in.... which was compliance and legal and accounted for the priciest part of the car seats. Layers of compliance regulations and the proper documentation of said compliance was an entire department of people. Plus an in house legal department specialized in dealing with the regular suits due to accidents/injuries.

#29
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But figure in all the other costs vs. the actual material cost and plant time for manufacturing only the helmet and then the actual helmet manufacture becomes a very small percentage of the overall cost: Packaging, assembly, shipping, warehousing, misc. overhead. And then you get into distribution which adds more shipping, warehousing, and overhead, on top of distributor markup. Same thing at a shop. Once it hits shop shelves, divide retail price by 10 to get a rough idea of total manufacturing costs -- that $50 helmet probably cost the helmet manufacturer $5 fresh off the manufacturing line, without shipping.
Perhaps advertising costs promoting brand recognition and monetary "incentives" paid to media outlets and retailers may be more for the pricey name brand products.

#31
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The test systems featured in this video are very expensive, based on working in the test equipment industry for 10 years, these systems are easy $50,000 and can quickly get over $150,000. Add to that, the staff that runs these test systems are highly trained engineers and get paid well. Lastly, you need to keep a facility to house the systems.
I have no knowledge of the money spent on legal. But everything I've read makes it clear this is a big cost for anybody working with safety equipment.

#32
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I have no real information. I have some history with test systems, reference this Giro and MIPS video:
The test systems featured in this video are very expensive, based on working in the test equipment industry for 10 years, these systems are easy $50,000 and can quickly get over $150,000. Add to that, the staff that runs these test systems are highly trained engineers and get paid well. Lastly, you need to keep a facility to house the systems.
I have no knowledge of the money spent on legal. But everything I've read makes it clear this is a big cost for anybody working with safety equipment.
The test systems featured in this video are very expensive, based on working in the test equipment industry for 10 years, these systems are easy $50,000 and can quickly get over $150,000. Add to that, the staff that runs these test systems are highly trained engineers and get paid well. Lastly, you need to keep a facility to house the systems.
I have no knowledge of the money spent on legal. But everything I've read makes it clear this is a big cost for anybody working with safety equipment.
Note that Giro is wholly owned by Easton-Bell Sports which is wholly owned by a private equity firm which normally releases no figures on its world wide helmet sales.
Background info about Giro ownership and estimated helmet sales figures is posted below.
US-Based Bicycle Helmet Manufacturers - Old Data!
In 2004 Bell Sports was purchased by Fenway Partners, a private-equity holding company. The Giro part of Bell was included. Through Fenway, Bell Sports in early 2005 repurchased the Bell motorcycle helmet manufacturing company that it had spun off in 1991. Then Bell merged with Riddell, known as a football helmet maker. In 2006 Riddell Bell merged with Easton Sports, and became Easton-Bell Sports, owned by Fenway Partners, Jim Easton, and The Ontario Teachers Pension Fund.
The Market for Bicycle Helmets
In the September 1, 2010 issue of Bicycle Retailer and Industry News, Easton-Bell's Greg Shapleigh is quoted saying that they sold 11 million helmets in 2009 "across all brands and categories." That would include bike, hockey, football, snow and baseball helmets, but BRAIN reported that "the majority of those were for cycling."

#33
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Packaging, assembly, shipping, warehousing, misc. overhead. And then you get into distribution which adds more shipping, warehousing, and overhead, don't cost any more for a $50-200 helmet than any $15 helmet available at the big box outlet. Nor do the more expensive helmets provide any better protection, only more markup/profits to the merchandisers up and down the distribution line.
Lots of variable costs with different helmet models means that different, higher-end models will indeed cost more to produce than any $15 helmet. Less being manufactured means a higher production cost. Usually with more costly materials and finish, more/different packaging and assembly. And I don't usually see advertising for $15 helmets in industry media, but I've seen all kinds of ad buys for top of the line stuff.
There are more expensive helmets which supposedly provide better protection, unless you are writing off MIPS system as an unproven marketing gimmick.
The markup is the same for top of the line helmets as it is for entry level helmets. And while profits on a dollar basis will be bigger, on a percentage basis, again, the same for the high end $200 helmet as the $40 entry level helmet.

#34
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Misc. overhead would include things like marketing/advertising.
Lots of variable costs with different helmet models means that different, higher-end models will indeed cost more to produce than any $15 helmet. Less being manufactured means a higher production cost. Usually with more costly materials and finish, more/different packaging and assembly. And I don't usually see advertising for $15 helmets in industry media, but I've seen all kinds of ad buys for top of the line stuff.
There are more expensive helmets which supposedly provide better protection, unless you are writing off MIPS system as an unproven marketing gimmick.
The markup is the same for top of the line helmets as it is for entry level helmets. And while profits on a dollar basis will be bigger, on a percentage basis, again, the same for the high end $200 helmet as the $40 entry level helmet.
Lots of variable costs with different helmet models means that different, higher-end models will indeed cost more to produce than any $15 helmet. Less being manufactured means a higher production cost. Usually with more costly materials and finish, more/different packaging and assembly. And I don't usually see advertising for $15 helmets in industry media, but I've seen all kinds of ad buys for top of the line stuff.
There are more expensive helmets which supposedly provide better protection, unless you are writing off MIPS system as an unproven marketing gimmick.
The markup is the same for top of the line helmets as it is for entry level helmets. And while profits on a dollar basis will be bigger, on a percentage basis, again, the same for the high end $200 helmet as the $40 entry level helmet.
What makes you think that the pricey models use more costly materials and finish, packaging or assembly?

#35
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#36
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Hopefully there is plenty of profit in bicycle helmet sales. But I'd be surprised if a LBS owner jumps in and confirms that.

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I'd say everything you state about helmets can be said about seat belts (if your helmet interferes with your sight, you're doing it wrong). My wife is short, for years seat belts would be on her neck, she was experiencing that. My daughter stress out about the seat belt retention locking up, and therefore has a real skill at getting them to lock up, she experiences that.
Back to my point, somehow bike helmets make people feel biking is dangerous and seat belts in cars do not have this affect on people. sheepeople.
Back to my point, somehow bike helmets make people feel biking is dangerous and seat belts in cars do not have this affect on people. sheepeople.

#38
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Your insistence on equating seat belts and helmets and not thinking about their differences is why you don't understand their different effects on the perception of danger. Its important to understand that people don't rationalise their perception of danger or even consciously consider it. Affects work bodily, and its from thinking about how products, systems and experiences work on the body that larger social affects becomes understandable. This conversation is not about proving that helmets make cycling seem dangerous by society - thats the work of statistics, if anything - but rather about understanding why helmets make cycling seem dangerous.

#39
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I'm redirecting this conversation to https://www.bikeforums.net/advocacy-s...hread-348.html - We have hijacked this thread from the OP question and created another helmet thread. Nobody needs that. Please continue this conversation on THE helmet thread. Thanks!
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